Brand Patio Cleaner Reviews

Where to Buy Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner: Top Retailers & Tips

Backyard patio at golden hour with a spray bottle labeled 'Patio Furniture Cleaner' on a table and clean outdoor furniture in the background.

Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner (product code 2107A, typically sold as a 24 oz or 32 oz trigger spray) is available through a handful of online retailers, select hardware stores, and directly through the manufacturer's network. Your fastest options right now are Walmart (check the 24 oz listing, though stock fluctuates), Hartville Hardware online, and specialty marketplace sellers on eBay when big-box stock runs dry. Retail listing 'Walmart, Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner (24 fl. oz., product page)' shows the 24 fl oz listing as out of stock when captured and lists a sample price of US$15.18 Walmart — Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner (24 fl. oz., product page). If you need it same-day, check your nearest Home Depot or Lowe's store locator, since both chains regularly carry the broader Goo Gone product family even when the patio-specific SKU is thin on the ground.

Quick answer: where to buy it right now

The honest reality with this SKU is that it is not stocked as consistently as the main Goo Gone adhesive remover line. That said, here is where I would look first, in order of reliability as of mid-2026:

  1. Walmart.com: a 24 fl oz listing exists at around $15.18, but stock comes and goes. Add it to your cart and check availability to your zip code before you count on it.
  2. Hartville Hardware (online): a 32 oz bottle has been listed at roughly $6.58, which is the best per-ounce price I have seen from a named retailer. Worth checking first if price matters.
  3. CamperPartsWorld: stocks the 24 oz at around $8.86 and caters to RV and outdoor-gear buyers, so patio-specific cleaners sit firmly in their catalog.
  4. eBay: new-in-box listings appear regularly, typically priced between $21 and $34 for a 24 oz bottle. That is a premium over retail, but it is a practical fallback when mainstream shelves are empty.
  5. GooGone.com / PurposeBuilt Brands: the manufacturer site links to authorized retailers. It does not always sell direct, but the 'Where to Buy' tool points you to current stockists.
  6. Home Depot and Lowe's: both carry the Goo Gone product family in-store and online. The patio-specific SKU can be hit-or-miss, but store staff can check backroom stock if you call ahead.

Best online retailers and how to order

For straightforward online ordering, Walmart and Hartville Hardware are your most reliable starting points. On Walmart.com, search the exact product name 'Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner' rather than browsing categories, because the product can get buried under the broader Goo Gone adhesive range. Check that the listing is fulfilled by Walmart or a Walmart-vetted seller rather than an unknown marketplace third party. On Hartville Hardware, the 32 oz listing (No. 2107) tends to have more consistent stock than smaller formats and offers a better per-ounce value.

Amazon is a natural first instinct, but the patio-specific SKU has limited active Amazon listings compared with other Goo Gone products. If you do find it on Amazon, check that the seller is either Amazon itself or a well-reviewed merchant with at least a few hundred sales. Avoid anonymous sellers with zero history, especially given the counterfeit concerns covered later in this article. If you track Amazon prices, tools like CamelCamelCamel and Keepa will alert you when a listing drops in price, which is useful if you are not in a hurry.

Home Depot and Lowe's both have Goo Gone product pages online. Stock on the patio cleaner SKU is inconsistent but worth checking, because both retailers offer in-store pickup and their fulfillment tends to be fast. Target carries the Goo Gone brand family but the patio-specific SKU is the hardest to find there. For eBay orders, filter for new condition, check that the GTIN or UPC on the listing matches known Goo Gone codes (look for UPCs starting with 070048, for example, 0070048200809 appears on some 24 oz listings), and buy only from sellers with solid feedback scores.

Local pickup and same-day options

If you need the cleaner today, open the Home Depot and Lowe's websites, search for 'Goo Gone' and filter by 'in-store' or 'check store availability'. Both sites let you enter your zip code to see real-time stock at your local branch before you drive over. I have had more success calling the store's customer service desk and asking someone to physically check the shelf rather than relying solely on the website count, which can lag by a day or two.

Walmart's same-day delivery through Walmart+ (or Instacart-powered options) can put the product on your doorstep within a few hours if your local store has it in stock. Curbside pickup through Walmart.com is another clean option: order online, park in the designated bay, and staff bring it out. Home Depot and Lowe's also offer buy-online-pickup-in-store (BOPIS) with a curbside option at most locations. For truly urgent jobs, Target's Drive Up service works similarly if the product is stocked at your local Target. Instacart can pull from multiple retailers simultaneously, which is handy when one store is out of stock.

Formats and sizes: which one to pick

Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner is primarily sold as a ready-to-use (RTU) trigger spray. The two main sizes are a 24 fl oz bottle and a 32 fl oz bottle (SKU/part number 2107 or 2107A depending on the variant). There are no concentrate or wipe formats specifically for the patio furniture line in current production, unlike some of the adhesive-remover products in the broader Goo Gone range. The RTU spray is straightforward: spray, agitate if needed, and wipe or rinse.

For a single set of patio chairs and a table, the 24 oz bottle is usually plenty for one good session. If you have a full outdoor dining setup plus a lounger set, or you are doing a deep clean after winter storage, go for the 32 oz bottle. It is also the better value per ounce when you can find it. I keep a 32 oz bottle under my outdoor storage bench so it is always within reach when I notice grime building up on my furniture between proper cleans.

Price and availability expectations

Format / SizeTypical Price RangeWhere AvailableStock Reliability
RTU Spray, 24 fl oz$8.86 – $15.18 (retail); $21 – $34 (eBay resale)Walmart, CamperPartsWorld, eBayModerate; can be out of stock at major retailers
RTU Spray, 32 fl oz~$6.58 (Hartville Hardware)Hartville Hardware; sporadic elsewhereLower availability; best per-ounce value when found
eBay new-in-box (any size)$21 – $34eBay marketplaceUsually available but at a premium
Goo Gone Adhesive Remover (related SKUs, not patio-specific)$4 – $12 depending on sizeAmazon, Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's, TargetHigh; consistently stocked

A few things affect price beyond the size: retailer markup, whether the item is fulfilled by the retailer directly or a third-party marketplace seller, and seasonality. Demand for patio cleaners peaks in spring (March through May in the US) and again after summer when people are prepping furniture for storage. If you shop in January or February, you are more likely to find it at base retail price. Buying during a spring sale event like a Memorial Day weekend promotion can also net a small discount, though the patio cleaner SKU is niche enough that it does not always make the sale circular.

Concentrate vs. ready-to-use: costs, storage, and dosing

Because Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner is sold ready-to-use rather than as a concentrate, this comparison is most relevant if you are deciding between this product and an alternative concentrate-format cleaner. RTU sprays are convenient for spot jobs and touchups, you grab the bottle and go. Concentrates such as Simple Green Oxy Solve or 30 SECONDS Outdoor Cleaner require mixing but deliver far better cost-per-use economics on large jobs. A 32 oz RTU bottle covers a few chairs comfortably. A one-gallon concentrate diluted at typical ratios can cover a full deck or a large furniture collection multiple times.

For storage, RTU bottles are simpler: no measuring, no mixing errors, and no accidental over-concentration that can damage surfaces. Concentrates need to be stored in their original labeled container with the cap tightly sealed, and it is worth marking the dilution ratio on the label if you transfer any to a spray bottle. If your patio cleaning needs are small-scale and periodic, RTU is the practical choice. If you are maintaining a large deck, multiple furniture sets, or rental properties, a concentrate will save you meaningful money over time. I learned this the hard way when I ran out of RTU spray halfway through a big session and had to stop mid-job.

Buying checklist before you order

Before you click 'add to cart', run through these checks. They apply whether you are a homeowner, renter, or a DIYer who cleans multiple properties.

  • Surface compatibility: Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner contains quaternary ammonium compounds, d-limonene, and ethoxylated alcohols (per the 2107A spec sheet). Test on an inconspicuous area of your furniture first, particularly on painted metal, powder-coated finishes, or varnished wood. Avoid using it on untreated natural wood without testing.
  • Material concerns: d-limonene (a citrus solvent) can soften some rubbers and plastics with prolonged contact. Spray, wipe, and rinse rather than soaking.
  • Tools needed: a microfibre cloth or soft-bristle brush for agitation, plus water for rinsing. A garden hose makes the job faster on larger pieces.
  • Scent and allergen flags: d-limonene is a known skin sensitizer for some people. If you or household members have citrus sensitivities or latex allergies, check the full SDS on the Goo Gone manufacturer site before buying.
  • Eco and disposal flags: quaternary ammonium compounds (quats) are biocidal and should not be rinsed in large volumes into storm drains or near water features. Check your local waste guidelines.
  • Renters: if you are cleaning furniture that belongs to a landlord or furnished rental, confirm the finish type before using any solvent-containing cleaner.
  • Volume check: for a standard 4-chair and table set, one 24 oz bottle is sufficient for a single clean. For a larger set or a full-season catch-up clean, buy the 32 oz or buy two bottles.

How to verify authenticity and avoid counterfeits

Goo Gone is a well-known brand, which unfortunately makes it a target for counterfeit listings on marketplaces, especially eBay and third-party Amazon sellers. The parent company, PurposeBuilt Brands (formerly Weiman Products), maintains an Authorized Reseller Policy and publishes guidance that Goo Gone products are sold only through authorized channels. If a price looks suspiciously low or a seller has no verifiable history, treat that as a red flag.

To verify a product, cross-check the UPC or GTIN on the listing against known Goo Gone codes. Most authentic Goo Gone UPCs start with 070048. Office Depot’s product page for Goo Gone Cleaner 8 oz lists the UPC as 070048771125, which matches the 070048… pattern used by authentic Goo Gone products Office Depot listing for Goo Gone Cleaner 8 oz (UPC 070048771125). For the patio furniture cleaner specifically, the GTIN 0070048200809 appears on known genuine 24 oz listings. If you receive a product and something looks off (thin label, incorrect font, watery formula), contact PurposeBuilt Brands directly at their corporate address in Gurnee, IL, or through the consumer contact number on the Goo Gone website. They can confirm whether a specific seller is authorized and advise on next steps if you have a counterfeit product.

  • Buy from named retailers (Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's, Hartville Hardware) rather than anonymous marketplace sellers when possible.
  • On Amazon, choose 'Ships from and sold by Amazon.com' listings rather than third-party fulfilled listings when the patio SKU appears.
  • Check the UPC prefix: genuine Goo Gone UPCs typically start with 070048.
  • Inspect the packaging on arrival: authentic bottles have a consistent label finish, clearly printed ingredient list, and a manufacturer lot code on the bottom.
  • Report suspicious listings to PurposeBuilt Brands through their contact page; they actively pursue unauthorized sellers under their Authorized Reseller Policy.

Where to find discounts and coupons

Goo Gone does not run deep coupon campaigns as frequently as commodity cleaning brands, but there are reliable routes to saving a few dollars. The Goo Gone website occasionally features printable or digital coupons, so it is worth checking the 'Offers' or 'Promotions' section before buying. Ibotta and Rakuten (formerly Ebates) sometimes carry cashback offers on household cleaner purchases from Walmart or Target that can apply to Goo Gone products. RetailMeNot and Honey are worth a quick check at checkout.

For Amazon listings that do have the product active, the Subscribe and Save option (typically 5 to 15 percent off) is worth using if you clean regularly, though you can cancel after the first delivery. Walmart's Rollback promotions occasionally hit cleaning products ahead of summer, so check the Walmart app in March and April. Home Depot and Lowe's run seasonal cleaning product sales around Memorial Day and Labor Day. Price matching is also available at both: if Hartville Hardware has the 32 oz bottle at $6.58 and your local Home Depot stocks it at a higher price, ask the service desk about price matching (both chains have formal price match policies).

If the patio-specific SKU is temporarily out of stock at a good price, use CamelCamelCamel or Keepa to set a price alert on any active Amazon listing. These tools are free and will email you when the price drops below a threshold you set, which is genuinely useful for a product that can swing between retail and secondary-market pricing.

Comparable patio cleaners worth considering

Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner is solid for spot-cleaning furniture surfaces, but it is a niche RTU product in a market with well-established alternatives that are often easier to find and better suited to larger outdoor jobs. For a detailed comparison of performance and cost-per-use, see the HG Patio Cleaner review. Here is how the main alternatives stack up. For user experiences and side-by-side comparisons, see monty patio cleaner reviews.

ProductFormat OptionsBest ForAvailabilityNotable Feature
Goo Gone Patio Furniture CleanerRTU spray (24–32 oz)Spot cleaning furniture; grease, grime, and sticky residue on furniture surfacesModerate; patchy retail stockd-limonene citrus formula; furniture-specific
HG Patio CleanerRTU and concentrateHard patio surfaces: stone, concrete, porcelain, brickGood at larger UK/EU retailers; growing US availabilityFast-acting; reviewed for surface-specific results
Monty / Monty Miracle Patio CleanerRTU spray and concentrateOutdoor patios, furniture, and general surfacesOnline and independent garden retailersBudget-friendly concentrate option
Patio MagicConcentrateMoss, algae, and lichen on patios and hard surfacesGarden centers, hardware stores, onlineLong-lasting residual moss/algae protection
Simple Green Oxy SolveConcentrate and RTULarge-area outdoor cleaning; decks, siding, furnitureWidely available at Home Depot, Lowe's, AmazonEPA Safer Choice certified; peroxide-based
30 SECONDS Outdoor CleanerHose-end, concentrate, RTULarge patios, driveways, and exterior surfacesGarden centers, home retailers, onlineHose-end convenience for big areas
Krud Kutter Outdoor CleanerConcentrate and RTUPatio furniture, concrete, outdoor surfaces with heavy grease/grimeLowe's, Amazon, onlineProfessional-grade; wide surface compatibility

If your main concern is cleaning the furniture itself rather than the surrounding patio surface, Goo Gone is a reasonable choice when you can find it at a fair price. See patio magic cleaner reviews for user experiences and independent evaluations of comparable products. But if you are dealing with a larger area, or if you are fighting mold, algae, or moss on stone or concrete surfaces, a dedicated patio surface cleaner is a better tool for the job. HG Patio Cleaner, Patio Magic, and Monty Miracle have all been tested and reviewed in detail elsewhere on this site for those specific scenarios, and the surface-by-surface breakdowns in those reviews will help you decide quickly.

Safety and follow-up use guidance

Always pull the Safety Data Sheet for Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner from the official Goo Gone SDS repository before your first use, especially if you are sensitive to fragrances or have pets that access your patio furniture. The formula (per the 2107A spec sheet) includes d-limonene, quaternary ammonium compounds, ethoxylated alcohols, and preservatives. The SDS will spell out recommended PPE (typically gloves and eye protection for prolonged contact), first aid steps, and disposal instructions for your jurisdiction.

In practice, for routine cleaning of outdoor furniture in a ventilated space, the product is straightforward to use: spray the surface, let it sit for a minute or two, agitate with a cloth or soft brush, and rinse with water. Avoid spraying directly onto cushion fabric without testing first, as d-limonene can affect some synthetic fabric coatings. If you have food prep happening on or near the furniture (outdoor dining tables), rinse the surface thoroughly after cleaning and allow it to dry before setting it for a meal. Keep the bottle out of reach of children and pets during use.

FAQ

Where can I buy Goo Gone Patio Furniture Cleaner online and locally (direct links and types)?

Online: official Goo Gone product pages and SDS (manufacturer): https://googone.com/sds and ingredient/spec PDF https://googone.com/media/ingredient/goo-gone-patio-furniture-cleaner-ingredients.pdf; big retailers with past/current listings: Walmart (product page sample) https://www.walmart.com/ip/802870385, Lowe’s (Goo Gone family) https://www.lowes.com/pd/Goo-Gone-Pro-Power-Erase-Paste/5015549619, Home Depot (Goo Gone family search at homedepot.com), Hartville Hardware (example 32‑oz listing) https://www.hartvillehardware.com/product/sku-842494/cushions, CamperPartsWorld (24‑oz example) https://www.camperpartsworld.com/patio-furniture-cleaner-24-oz.html. Secondary/marketplace options when retail is out: eBay sample listing (may show legacy UPC/GTIN) https://www.ebay.com/itm/156630228847. Local: check same‑day local inventory / curbside pickup at Walmart, Lowe’s, Home Depot; call independent hardware stores (use local search) or check stock at nearby specialty/outdoor stores — many stores carry other Goo Gone SKUs even if the patio‑specific SKU is scarce.

Are same‑day pickup or local purchase options available?

Yes. Big‑box retailers (Walmart, Lowe’s, Home Depot) often offer same‑day in‑store pickup or curbside if the SKU is in stock; use each store’s website to check nearby inventory and reserve for pickup. Independent hardware stores can have the 24–32 oz patio SKU on shelves—call ahead. If the patio SKU is out of stock, many stores carry other Goo Gone formats (spray gel, wipes, adhesive removers) that may meet your need immediately.

Which formats and sizes of Goo Gone patio/cleaner are available and what are typical price ranges?

Common formats/sizes seen historically: 24 fl oz and 32 fl oz trigger‑spray bottles (SKU/part 2107/2107A), smaller 8 oz bottles, and other Goo Gone product formats (spray‑gel, wipes, paste) for adhesive removal. Typical retail price range (recent samples): roughly US$6–$16 for 24–32 oz at small retailers/discount listings; sample Walmart capture showed ~$15; independent sellers have shown lower (~$6.58 at one store) and secondary market/resale prices can be higher (US$20–$35+) when SKU is scarce. Always confirm the listing’s size/format before purchase.

What should I check before buying (a concise buying checklist)?

Buying checklist: 1) Confirm format & volume (24 oz vs 32 oz vs 8 oz) and spray type (trigger vs hose/ready‑to‑use). 2) Surface compatibility: read label/SDS for intended surfaces (patio furniture materials). 3) Concentrate vs ready‑to‑use: choose concentrate for large areas (not common for this SKU) or RU‑use for spot cleaning. 4) UPC/GTIN on listing to confirm SKU (compare with known Goo Gone UPC patterns). 5) Seller authorization and reviews—avoid suspiciously cheap or unverified sellers. 6) Price and shipping/return policy (local pickup vs shipped). 7) Safety instructions (SDS) and PPE needed for use.

How can I verify product authenticity and avoid counterfeit or gray‑market bottles?

Verify authenticity: 1) Check UPC/GTIN on the retail page or product label and compare to known Goo Gone UPC ranges (many begin with 070048…). Example UPC references on retailer pages. 2) Buy from authorized channels or reputable national retailers; consult Weiman/PurposeBuilt’s Authorized Reseller Policy to confirm sellers: https://weiman.com/authorized-reseller-policy and contact PurposeBuilt Brands for validation: https://purposebuiltbrands.com/contact. 3) Inspect packaging on arrival (tampering, odd labeling, misspellings). 4) If in doubt, contact manufacturer customer service (Goo Gone/Weiman) with seller and UPC details to confirm.

Where can I find discounts, coupons, or price alerts for Goo Gone patio cleaner?

Discount routes: 1) Store sales and weekly ads at big‑box retailers (check local store pages). 2) Manufacturer promotions or printable coupons from Goo Gone/Weiman social or promo pages. 3) Price trackers for Amazon SKUs (if available) — CamelCamelCamel / Keepa for alerts: https://camelcamelcamel.com/. 4) Subscribe & Save or multi‑buy discounts where offered on retailer sites. 5) Coupon sites and browser‑extension deal finders, and loyalty programs at hardware stores. 6) Consider buying similar, better‑stocked alternatives during sales (see comparable cleaners below). Always confirm coupon terms and seller legitimacy.

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